Oliver Zompro & Joachim Adis Îëèâåð Öîìïðî, Éîàõèì Àäèñ

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Russian Entomol. J. 15(1): 21 24 RUSSIAN ENTOMOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 2006 Notes on Namibian Mantophasma Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002, with descriptions of three new species (Insecta: Mantophasmatodea: Mantophasmatidae: Mantophasmatini) Çàìåòêè î íàìèáèéñêèõ Mantophasma Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002 c îïèñàíèÿìè òð õ íîâûõ âèäîâ (Insecta: Mantophasmatodea: Mantophasmatidae: Mantophasmatini) Oliver Zompro & Joachim Adis Îëèâåð Öîìïðî, Éîàõèì Àäèñ Max-Planck-Institut für Limnologie, AG Tropenökologie, August-Thienemann-Straße 2, 24306 Plön, Germany, E-mail: adis@mpilploen.mpg.de. Институт лимнологии Макса Планка, АО Тропэкологии, ул. Августа Тинеманна 2, 24306 Плэн, Германия. KEY WORDS: Mantophasmatodea, Mantophasma, new species, Namibia. КЛЮЧЕВЫЕ СЛОВА: Mantophasmatodea, Mantophasma, новые виды, Намибия. ABSTRACT. Three new species of Mantophasma are described from mountain ranges in Namibia: M. gamsbergense sp.n., M. kudubergense sp.n. and M. omatakoense sp.n. In addition, Sclerophasma paresisensis Klass et al., 2003, is transferred to Mantophasma comb.n. РЕЗЮМЕ. Описываются три новых вида Mantophasma из горных хребтов Намибии: M. gamsbergense sp.n., M. kudubergense sp.n. и M. omatakoense sp.n. Кроме того, вид Sclerophasma paresisensis Klass et al., 2003 впервые переведён в состав рода Mantophasma comb.n. Introduction The insect order Mantophasmatodea Zompro et al. was described as recently as 2002. The description was initially based on a species from Baltic amber ( Raptophasma kerneggeri Zompro, 2001), followed by specimens traced in museums. Afterwards several species have been collected in southern Africa [Zompro et al., 2002, 2003; Klass et al., 2003], resulting in a rapid increase in species descriptions. The inter- and intraordinal relationships have been analysed by Zompro [2005], with the result that the families established by Klass et al. [2003] could be synonymised with a tribe and a genus, respectively. A synonymic checklist is presented below. It becomes increasingly obvious that eventually every southern African mountain range supports its own endemic species. Therefore exact collecting data are helpful for correct identifications. Three new species of Mantophasma Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002 are described here, all from Namibia. Synonymic checklist of Mantophasmatodea (valid taxa boldface) Ensiferophasmatidae Zompro, 2005 Ensiferophasma Zompro, 2005 Mantophasmatidae Zompro et al., 2002 Raptophasmatinae Zompro, 2005 Raptophasmatini Zompro, 2005 Raptophasma Zompro, 2001 (= Adicophasma Engel & Grimaldi, 2004, synonymised by Zompro [2005]) Raptophasma kerneggeri Zompro, 2001 (= Adicophasma spinosa Engel & Grimaldi, 2004, synonymised by Zompro [2005]) Mantophasmatinae Zompro et al., 2002 Mantophasmatini Zompro et al., 2002 (= Austrophasmatidae Klass et al., 2003: Zompro [2005]) Mantophasma Zompro et al., 2002 (= Austrophasma Klass et al., 2003; = Sclerophasma Klass et al., 2003; = Tanzaniophasmatidae Klass et al., 2003; = Tanzaniophasma Klass et al., 2003, all synonymised by Zompro [2005]). Mantophasma gamsbergense Zompro & Adis sp.n. Mantophasma kudubergense Zompro & Adis sp.n. Mantophasma omatakoense Zompro & Adis sp.n. Mantophasma subsolana Zompro et al., 2002 Mantophasma zephyra Zompro et al., 2002 Tyrannophasmatini Zompro, 2005 Tyrannophasma Zompro, 2003 T. gladiator Zompro, 2003 Praedatophasma Zompro & Adis, 2002 P. maraisi Zompro & Adis, 2002

22 Oliver Zompro & Joachim Adis Mantophasmatini incertae sedis The following taxa are either insufficiently documented or too poorly described so that at present their taxonomic position cannot be defined. Austrophasma caledonensis Klass et al., 2003 Austrophasma gansbaaiensis Klass et al., 2003 Austrophasma rawsonvillensis Klass et al., 2003 Hemilobophasma Klass et al., 2003 Hemilobophasma montaguensis Klass et al., 2003 Karoophasma Klass et al., 2003 Karoophasma biedouwensis Klass et al., 2003 Karoophasma botterkloofensis Klass et al., 2003 Lobophasma Klass et al., 2003. Preoccupied by Lobophasma Günther, 1935 (Phasmatodea). Lobophasma redelinghuysensis Klass et al., 2003 Namaquaphasma Klass et al., 2003 Namaquaphasma ookiepensis Klass et al., 2003 Materials and methods The material described below was collected by various persons in Namibia. It is preserved in 96% ethanol. The examinations were executed using a Zeiss-Citoval- 2 stereoscope, while the drawings prepared by means of an attached drawing tube. Measurements were taken with an MБC 9 stereoscope and a scale ocular. Taxonomic part Mantophasma Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002 TYPE SPECIES: Mantophasma zephyra Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002, by original designation. Mantophasma Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002: 1456; Zompro, Adis & Weitschat, 2002: 275; Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 50; Zompro, 2005: 101. = Austrophasma Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 27 = Sclerophasma Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 50 = Tanzaniophasmatidae Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 51 = Tanzaniophasma Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 51, all synonymised by Zompro [2005: 101]. DIAGNOSIS. The diagnosis presented here defines the subgenus Mantophasma. Both Austrophasma and Tanzaniophasma possibly represent valid subgenera. General coloration of living specimens green or light brown, possibly also spotted, thoracic nota with a yellow to whitish stripe laterally. Body and femora smooth, without granulae, tubercles or definite spines. Legs in males reddish brown, in females coloured as body. Eyes comparatively small. Pronotum rectangular, longer than wide. Exteroventral carinae of pro- and mesofemora as well as pro- and mesotibiae spinose. Protibiae with small spines or tubercles dorsally, these much smaller or absent on mesotibiae. Mid- end hindlegs smooth, sometimes with very small spines on exteroventral carinae of femora. Male vomer broad, without acute apex. Male cerci broad, flattened, at least slightly curved inwards. SPECIES INCLUDED: Five species of the subgenus Mantophasma occur in Namibia: M. gamsbergense sp.n., M. kudubergense sp.n., M. omatakoense sp.n. and M. zephyrum Zompro et al., 2002. In addition, M. paresisense (Klass et al., 2003) is tentatively included. Given so few morphological differences, it remains open to question if these taxa represent species or subspecies. Considering the geographical separation, we decided to treat them as species. Their differences lie mainly in body size and in structure of the genitalia. To avoid unnecessary repetitions, the descriptions are reduced to diagnostic characters. Mantophasma gamsbergense Zompro & Adis sp.n. Figs 4, 6. MATERIAL: 4 $$. Holotype, $, paratypes, 3 $$: Namibia, Windhoek District, Gamsberg, southern slope, 2208 m, S23 20'50.4'' E16 13'34.6'', with sweepnet, 25.III.2006, leg. T.L. Bird. Holotype and 2 paratypes in the Namibian National Insect Collection, National Museum, Windhoek, Namibia, one paratype in the Zoologisches Museum der Christian-Albrecht- Universität, Kiel, Germany (all in ethanol). DIAGNOSIS: Female. Small species. Green, pattern as in Fig. 6, possibly with darker stripes on back and a lighter abdomen when alive. Abdominal tergite X almost evenly rounded posteriorly. IX about two-thirds as long as X. Sternite VII strikingly long, projecting beyond middle of tergite IX. Sternite VI with two flat elevations posterosubmedially. These elevations are absent from the much larger M. kudubergense sp.n. Lengths (mm): Total: 12.1 13.1; head: 1.4 1.5, width: 2.3 2.4; eye (l h): 1.0 0.4 1.1 0.4; antennae: 11.4 12.2; pronotum: 2.0 2.2, width: 2.0 2.1; mesonotum: 1.9 2.0, width: 1.8 1.9; metanotum: 1.7 1.9, width: 1.2 1.6; profemora: 3.1 3.5; protibiae: 3.2 3.9; protarsi: 1.1 1.3; mesofemora: 3.0 3.5; mesotibiae: 2.9 3.4; mesotarsi: 1.0 1.1; metafemora: 4.7 5.2; metatibiae: 5.5 5.9; metatarsi: 1.2 1.6. NAME: After the type locality. Mantophasma kudubergense Zompro & Adis sp.n. Figs 2 3, 7 8,10, 12. (cf. figs 18 19 in Zompro et al. [ 2003]). Mantophasma zephyra Adis, Zompro, Moombolah-Goagoses & Marais, 2002: 64; Dallai, Frati, Lupetti & Adis, 2003: 67; Zompro, Adis, Bragg, Naskrecki, Meakin, Wittneben & Saxe, 2003: 21. MATERIAL: 8 ##, 7 $$. Holotype, #, paratypes, 7 ## and 7 $$: Namibia, Erongo Prov., Erongo Mts., Kuduberg, Mosich Farm, S21 40'42'' E015 45'32'', 1550m, 04.IV.2002, leg. E. Marais (four paratypes elevated from nymphs by J. Adis, Plön). In the Namibian National Insect Collection, National Museum, Windhoek, Namibia. One pair of paratypes in the Zoologisches Museum der Christian-Albrecht-Universität, Kiel, Germany (all in ethanol). DIAGNOSIS. When alive, colouration typical for subgenus Mantophasma. Eye with a longitudinal red stripe in dorsal half. In ethanol light yellow. Male. Abdominal tergite X broad, slightly globose, almost straight posteriorly. Vomer subrectangular, left quarter folded anteriad at a right angle. A triangular process present below this fold. Folded part slightly projecting in apical corner. Cerci slightly compressed basally and strongly flattened apically, with a simple apex. Female. Abdominal tergite X evenly rounded posteriorly, IX half as long. Sternite only slightly projecting beyond anterior margin of tergite IX. Lengths (mm), ##: Total: 12.1 15.4; head: 1.1 1.4, width: 2.2 2.4; eye (l h): 1.0 0.45 1.1 0.6; antennae: 11.2 13.8; pronotum: 2.4 2.5, width: 2.0 2.1; mesonotum: 1.9 2.1, width: 1.9 2.1; metanotum: 1.6 1.7, width: 1.7 1.8;

Notes on Namibian Mantophasma 1 2 3 4 Figs 1 4. Terminal abdominal segments dorsal, lateral and ventral views (without scale): 1 Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n., #; 2 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n., #; 3 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n., $; 4 Mantophasma gamsbergense sp.n., $. O. Zompro. Ðèñ. 1 4. Ïîñëåäíèå ñåãìåíòû áðþøêà ñâåðõó, ñáîêó è ñíèçó (áåç ìàñøòàáà): 1 Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n., #; 2 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n., #; 3 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n., $; 4 Mantophasma gamsbergense sp.n., $. O. Zompro. Fig. 5. Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n., holotype, #. C. Grohmann. Ðèñ. 5. Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n., ãîëîòèï, #. C. Grohmann.

Oliver Zompro & Joachim Adis Fig. 6. Mantophasma gamsbergense sp.n., holotype, $. J. Adis. Ðèñ. 6. Mantophasma gamsbergense sp.n., ãîëîòèï, $. J. Adis. Fig. 7. Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n., $. O. Zompro. Ðèñ. 7. Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n., $. O. Zompro. Fig. 8. Habitat of Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n. at Kuduberg. T. Kujawski / ASA-Multimedia, Flintbek, Germany (kujawski@asa-multimedia.de). Ðèñ. 8. Ìåñòîîáèòàíèå Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n. ó Êóäóáåðãà. T. Kujawski / ASA-Multimedia, Flintbek, Germany (kujawski@asa-multimedia.de).

Notes on Namibian Mantophasma 23 9 10 11 12 Figs 9 10. Male vomer: 9 Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n.; 10 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n. Scale bar 1 mm. O. Zompro. Ðèñ. 9 10. Âîìåð ñàìöà: 9 Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n.; 10 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n. Ìàñøòàá 1 ìì. O. Zompro. Fig. 11 12. Male cerci: 11 Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n., 12 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n.; top right, bottom left. Scale bar 1 mm. O. Zompro. Ðèñ. 11 12. Öåðêè ñàìöà: 11 Mantophasma omatakoense sp.n.; 12 Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n.; ââåðõó: ñïðàâà; âíèçó: ñëåâà. Ìàñøòàá 1 ìì. O. Zompro. profemora: 3.3 3.5; protibiae: 3.5 3.7; protarsi: 1.1 1.2; mesofemora: 2.9 3.1; mesotibiae: 3.7 3.9; mesotarsi: 1.0 1.2; metafemora: 4.5 5.0; metatibiae: 5.3 5.6; metatarsi: 1.2 1.4. Lengths (mm), $$: Total: 16.3 21.3; head: 1.3 1.5, width: 2.6 2.8; eye (l h): 1.0 0.5 1.3 0.6; antennae: 14.9 19.9; pronotum: 2.6 2.8, width: 2.4 2.6; mesonotum: 2.5 2.6, width: 2.1 2.3; metanotum: 1.6 2.1, width: 2.1 2.3; profemora: 4.1 4.2; protibiae: 4.3 4.5; protarsi: 1.5 1.7; mesofemora: 3.2 3.3; mesotibiae: 3.3 3.5; mesotarsi: 1.4 1.7; metafemora: 5.2 5.3; metatibiae: 6.1 6.6; metatarsi: 1.4 1.6. NAME: After the type locality. Mantophasma omatakoense Zompro & Adis sp.n. Figs 1, 5, 9, 11. MATERIAL: Holotype, # (in ethanol): Omatako-Farm between Otjiwarongo and Okahandja, S21 20.72'' E16 43.92'', 10.IV.2005, on bagpack, leg. C. Grohmann. In the Namibian National Insect Collection, National Museum, Windhoek, Namibia. DIAGNOSIS: Mantophasmatini. Male. Body green, thorax with whitish yellow margins, legs violet, knees green. Eye with a violet longitudinal stripe in dorsal half. Abdominal tergite X broadened posteriad, broadly emarginate posteriorly. Cerci broad and flat. Right one slightly bifurcate, apex of left one simple. Male vomer subrectangular, left fifth folded anteriad. Dorsal margin slightly bent anteriad. Arms broad and simple. Lengths (mm): Total: 12.4; head: 1.4, width: 2.3; eye (l h): 0.9 0.45; antennae: 11.1; pronotum: 2.2, width: 1.5; mesonotum: 2.0, width: 2.0; metanotum: 0.8, width: 1.7; profemora: 3.9; protibiae: 4.4; protarsi: 1.1; mesofemora: 3.6; mesotibiae: 3.5; mesotarsi: 1.3; metafemora: 5.6; metatibiae: 6.2; metatarsi: 1.1. Female unknown. NAME: After the type locality. Mantophasma paresisense (Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003), comb.n. Sclerophasma paresisensis Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 50, figs 4K, 22 23. MATERIAL: This species could only be re-evaluated based on the brief and incomplete original description. DIAGNOSIS: Male 16.6 mm, female 16.8 mm. This species was described from Namibia, Paresisberg, Otjiwarango District, S20 36' E16 28'. The shape of the male vomer suggests that it represents a species of Mantophasma. This is also supported by distribution. The small difference in the sizes of both sexes seems to indicate that the female paratypes could be nymphs. Adult females would presumably measure about 20 mm. The male vomer lacks the triangular process present in M. kudubergense sp.n., while M. omatakoense sp.n. differs by the more strongly emarginate abdominal tergite X and in shape of the male vomer. Mantophasma zephyrum Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002 Mantophasma zephyra Zompro, Klass, Kristensen & Adis, 2002: 1456 Zompro, Adis, & Weitschat, 2002: 276; Zompro, 2002: 370; Klass, Picker, Damgaard, Van Noort & Tojo, 2003: 50. Non Mantophasma zephyra Adis, Zompro, Moombolah- Goagoses & Marais, 2002: 64; Dallai, Frati, Lupetti & Adis, 2003: 67; Zompro, Adis, Bragg, Naskrecki, Meakin, Wittneben & Saxe, 2003: 21 (described above as Mantophasma kudubergense sp.n.). MATERIAL: Holotype, $ (in ethanol): D. S. W. Afr. S. G. Seewald JR. No. 827/09 (Zoologisches Museum Berlin). Presumably collected in northern Namibia, where Seewald worked. The type species of Mantophasma was described from a single $ (23.6 mm) with comparatively imprecise collecting data. For further work on Mantophasma, more material and, especially, males of this species are required. M. zephyrum differs from the other Namibian congeners by the very short abdominal tergite X, which is only slightly longer than IX. Discussion The Recent species of Mantophasma inhabit the southern half of Africa. They mainly occur in the mountains, apparently every mountain range supporting endemic congeners. The species differ in minor details of genitalic structure, this being evidence of separation/isolation in a not too distant past. It is easy to

24 Oliver Zompro & Joachim Adis predict that several more species will be found in future when other mountainous regions become prospected. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. The authors wish to thank Stefanie and Reinhard Mosich for their kind hospitality at Kuduberg, as well as Tharina Bird and Constanze Grohmann for the supply of material. This project was partly financed by a grant of the Max-Planck-Institut für Limnologie, AG Tropenökologie, to O. Zompro. Sergei I. Golovatch is thanked for valuable discussions, and Berit Hansen for the help received with laboratory cultures. This contribution is part of a collaboration from 2002 through 2007 on Developing Knowledge about the Biocoenoses of the Order Mantophasmatodea in Namibia between the Tropical Ecology Working Group, Max-Planck-Institute for Limnology, Plön, Germany, and the National Museum of Namibia, Windhoek, Namibia. References Adis J., Zompro O., Moombolah-Goagoses E. & Marais E. 2002. Gladiators: A new order of insects // Scientific American. Vol.287. No.5. P.60 65. Dallai R., Frati F., Lupetti P. & Adis J. 2003. Sperm ultrastructure of Mantophasma zephyra (Insecta, Mantophasmatodea) // Zoomorphology. Vol.122. P.67 76. Klass K.D., Picker M.D., Damgaard J., van Noort S. & Tojo K. 2003. The taxonomy, genitalic morphology, and phylogenetic relationships of Southern African Mantophasmatodea (Insecta) / / Entom. Abh. Naturk. Mus. Desden. Bd.61. H.1. S.3 67. Klass K.D., Zompro O., Kristensen N.P. & Adis J. 2002. Mantophasmatodea: a new order of extant insects from the Afrotropics // Science. Vol.296. P.1456 1459. Zompro O. 2001. The Phasmatodea and Raptophasma n. gen., Orthoptera incertae sedis, in Baltic amber (Insecta: Orthoptera) // Mitt. Geol.-Paläontol. Inst. Univ. Hamburg. Bd.85. S.229 261. Zompro O. 2005. Inter- and intra-ordinal relationships of the Mantophasmatodea, with comments on the phylogeny of polyneopteran orders (Insecta: Polyneoptera) // Ibid. Bd.89. S.85 114. Zompro O., Adis J. & Weitschat W. 2002. A review of the Order Mantophasmatodea (Insecta) // Zool. Anz. Bd.241. H.3. S.269 279. Zompro O, Adis J., Bragg P.E., Naskrecki P., Meakin K., Wittneben M. & Saxe V. 2003. A new genus and species of Mantophasmatidae (Insecta: Mantophasmatodea) from the Brandberg Massif, Namibia, with notes on behaviour // Cimbebasia. Vol.19. P.13 24.